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Tax audit readiness in Nigeria is really about being so organised that Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) or State IRS (like LIRS) never catches you unprepared, even if they show up tomorrow morning at your door step. In this article, we will walk through what that looks like in practice, from the complete document checklist to how to respond to queries without panicking.

1. Understand what a tax audit really is

A tax audit is simply the NRS or a State IRS (like LIRS) checking whether what you have declared and paid matches your true transactions and tax obligations under Nigerian law.

Common types you’ll see:

If you treat a tax audit like a one‑off battle, you’ll always feel attacked. Treat it like part of normal compliance, and you organise your business differently.

2. The core mindset for audit readiness

Before documents, the right mindset makes a huge difference.

A helpful way to think about it; if a stranger picked up your files today, could they clearly see what you earned, what you spent, and how you computed your tax?

3. The complete tax audit document checklist (Nigeria‑focused)

Below is a practical checklist you can use as a working template. You will not need every single item for every audit, but if you can tick off 80–90% of this list, you’re in strong shape.

3.1 Corporate and tax identity documents

These are usually the first things requested to confirm who you are and your registration status.

3.2 Tax clearance and past returns

Auditors want to see what you have declared and whether you’re up to date.

3.3 Financial statements and accounting records

If your accounting is messy, your audit experience will be messy. This is the heart of the file.

3.4 Revenue and sales documentation

This is where FIRS and LIRS focus heavily because it directly affects your taxable income and VAT.

The key is that the total sales in your financial statements must match your VAT schedules, WHT records, and bank lodgements, barring clearly explained differences.

3.5 Expense, procurement and suppliers’ documentation

Tax authorities want to verify that your expenses are genuine, business‑related, and correctly treated for tax.

Watch out for:

3.6 Payroll, PAYE and HR records

NRS, pays close attention to payroll.

3.7 VAT and WHT records

These two areas that generates frequent queries and assessments.

The “golden rule”: VAT, WHT, and your ledgers must agree, or you should be able to explain every variance clearly.

3.8 Fixed assets and capital allowances

Auditors want to ensure your capital allowance claims are not inflated.

3.9 Related party, loans, and equity

Cross‑border and related party transactions are more sensitive now.

3.10 Other compliance documents

Depending on your industry, these might be requested:

If you compile these into a structured “audit file” per year (even in soft copy, properly labelled), you’re already ahead of most organizations.

4. How to get ready before an audit comes

Think of this as your internal “pre‑audit”.

4.1 Build an internal tax file every year

Instead of waiting for a letter, build your tax file as you go.

4.2 Do a periodic self‑audit

At least once a year (preferably before filing CIT returns):

Many assessment disputes come from simple things like unremitted WHT or PAYE, or unreconciled differences the company never cleaned up.

4.3 Create an audit response team

Auditors get nervous when nobody seems to own anything in an organisation.

Minimum team:

Agree internally that staff should not respond to auditors on their own; everything goes through the contact person.

5. How to respond to FIRS / LIRS inquiries and queries

Now to what most people really worry about: that letter or email from NRS or LIRS.

5.1 When you receive a tax inquiry or audit notification

Common documents include a notice of audit, request for information, or a tax assessment (additional liability). Your first reaction must be disciplined, not emotional.

Steps:

  1. Acknowledge receipt promptly in writing, politely.
  2. Read the letter line by line:
    • What period is under review?
    • Which tax type(s) are in issue?
    • What documents are they asking for?
  3. Inform your internal audit team and your tax adviser immediately and schedule a quick strategy meeting.

Many problems arise because taxpayers ignore letters or respond late; penalties and interest then build up.

5.2 General principles for written responses

Every response to FIRS or LIRS should follow some basic rules.

5.3 Responding to a simple information request

For a basic request (e.g. “provide VAT returns for 2022”), keep it straightforward.

Providing more information than requested can open unnecessary lines of inquiry; providing less can suggest you’re hiding something.

5.4 Responding to a tax query or proposed adjustment

Here, NRS/LIRS believes you owe more than you declared. They may issue a query or an assessment showing additional tax, penalties, and interest.

Your approach should be:

Understand their basis

Gather evidence

Decide your position

File an objection (if necessary)

5.5 Meeting with NRS / LIRS officers

Most audits involve meetings. Use them wisely.

Having a tax adviser with you helps keep the discussion within the right boundaries.

5.6 If you still disagree – escalation options

If, after your objection, you still disagree with the position of the tax authority, you’re not helpless.

Options commonly include:

Litigation should usually be a last resort; many matters can be resolved through negotiation when you have strong facts and clean documentation.

6. Practical tips to reduce audits and queries

You can’t always avoid an audit, but you can reduce how painful they are.

Final Thoughts

Tax audits aren’t personal, they’re simply part of Nigeria’s drive to improve tax compliance and grow public revenue. The real difference between a messy audit and a smooth one is usually preparation, not luck. When you build audit readiness into your normal way of doing business, good records, timely filings and clear documentation. you remove the fear factor and stay in control.

If you’re in Lagos or dealing with NRS anywhere in Nigeria and you’re feeling overwhelmed, you don’t have to face it alone. Speak with a competent tax adviser early before issues escalate. We can review your current setup, run a mock audit, clean up your documentation and even stand in for you during engagements with NRS or LIRS so you’re not saying the wrong things under pressure.

The bottom line is simple, preparation today will always cost less than a poorly handled audit tomorrow. Stay compliant, stay proactive and keep your business positioned for growth instead of distractions. And if you have specific questions about your own situation or want a second pair of eyes on your tax exposure, feel free to reach out, we’re always happy to help you think it through.

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